William Beaver asked for "a simple, safe" way to remove the arrows from the shortcuts on his desktop.

You don't need a little arrow in the corner to tell you that icon is a shortcut. Here's how to remove it.

William Beaver asked for "a simple, safe" way to remove the arrows from the shortcuts on his desktop.

Shortcuts point to files--usually but not always programs--that are stored elsewhere on your drive. If you drag and drop a program from the Start menu to the desktop, you create a shortcut to the original program. To make it clear that it's a shortcut and not the original file, Windows displays an arrow in the lower-left corner of the icon.

If you don't like the arrows, you can turn them off by editing the Windows Registry. But William asked for a safe solution, so I'm offering an easier, less dangerous way to make the change.

Once it's up, click Customization in the left pane, then click the File Explorer tab. Click the Remove Shortcut Arrows From Shortcut Icons button. The change happens immediately.

If you're using Windows 7 or an earlier version, the Club recommends the older Ultimate Windows Tweaker version 2. Unzip and load the program. Then click Additional Tweaks in the left pane. Check Remove arrows from Shortcut Icons. The changes won't take place until you click Apply, then Close, and then reboot (or at least log off and on).

Most programs allow you to click Apply or Close. But this one only works if you do one, and then the other.